Results 1 to 10 of 31
Hybrid View
-
12-30-2006, 12:56 PM #1OPSenior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
December 30, 2006 4:36 AM EST
Associated Press
DEARBORN, Mich. - With tears in his eyes and a grin on his face, 13-year-old Ali Al-Najjar watched his father celebrate the death of Saddam Hussein.
The Dearborn resident was emotional Friday night - not only did his dream of the former Iraqi president's execution come true, but he said he was witnessing a rare occurrence.
"This is the first time I've seen my dad this happy," he said as he watched the crowd of about 200 Iraqi-Americans cheer outside a Detroit-area mosque as drivers honked horns in jubilation. "I've been praying for this all my life."
His father, Imam Husham Al-Husainy, the director of the Karbalaa Islamic Educational Center mosque, had gathered some of the men earlier in the night, praying for the death of the former Iraqi dictator.
The crowd swelled until the announcement of Saddam's execution rippled throughout the gathering, leading some to dance and sing and others to fall to their knees and cry. Many draped Iraqi and American flags on their heads, shoulders and car hoods.
Chants of "Now there's peace, Saddam is dead" in English and Arabic rang into the night.
"This is our celebration of the death of Saddam," said Al-Husainy while standing on top of a car following reports that Saddam had been hanged. "The gift of our New Year is the murder of Saddam Hussein.
"If you want to share the Iraqi people's happiness for the death of Saddam, raise your voice and your hands."
The crowd responded with resounding cheers.
The Detroit area contains one of the nation's largest concentrations of people with roots in the Middle East, including an Iraqi community of Chaldeans, who are Catholic, Arabs and Kurds. Many from Iraq fled their homeland during the rule of Saddam.
In Dearborn, Dave Alwatan was among those who gathered at the Karbalaa center. He wore an Iraqi flag around his shoulders and grinned. He flashed a peace sign at everyone he passed.
"Peace," he said, smiling and laughing. "Now there will be peace for my family."
Alwatan, 32, an Iraqi-American, said Saddam's forces tortured and killed family members that were left behind when he left Iraq in 1991.
Others expressed a similar sense of relief.
"I feel like I lost something all my life and today it is found," said Moshtaq al-Bazaz, of Windsor, Ontario, who used to live in Dearborn and still prays at the mosque.
Some local Arab-American leaders predicted that Saddam's execution will increase violence overseas and leave the Iraqi people unsettled.
Osama Siblani, publisher of The Arab American News and chairman of several local Arab-American groups, said Saddam's death sentence is one more casualty in a war that has killed thousands, and it will not solve the power struggle among Iraqi religious groups.
"The execution might bring some amusement and accomplishment to the Bush administration, but it will not help the Iraqi people," Siblani said.
Edward Odisho, 68, an Iraqi refugee since 1981 who now lives in Morton Grove, Ill., said it will take time for Iraqis to recover from Saddam's reign.
"It will take one to two generations to eradicate the garbage left over from Saddam Hussein and to re-establish a healthy generation," said Odisho, a linguistics professor at Northeastern Illinois University.
Rauf Naqishbendi, 53, an Iraqi Kurd from Halabja who now lives a few miles south of San Francisco moved to the U.S. in 1977.
Naqishbendi said he was pleased that Saddam was being executed, but lamented that it will not bring back family members who he said were gassed by the dictator's henchman in 1988.
"Psychologically the execution is good news, and people will feel that justice has been served," he said. "But the reality is that it's not going to bring back my family members who he killed."
---
Associated Press writers David Runk in Detroit, Carla K. Johnson in Chicago and Jason Dearen in San Francisco contributed to this report.Torog Reviewed by Torog on . Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death December 30, 2006 4:36 AM EST Associated Press DEARBORN, Mich. - With tears in his eyes and a grin on his face, 13-year-old Ali Al-Najjar watched his father celebrate the death of Saddam Hussein. The Dearborn resident was emotional Friday night - not only did his dream of the former Iraqi president's execution come true, but he said he was witnessing a rare occurrence. "This is the first time I've seen my dad this happy," he said as he watched Rating: 5
-
12-30-2006, 04:00 PM #2Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Should have been done During Desert storm....glad its done now.
Happy New year Torog.....
-
12-31-2006, 02:46 PM #3OPSenior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Originally Posted by Bong30
Howdy Bong !
I hear ya man !
Happy New Year..back at ya !
Have a good one ! :jointsmile:
-
12-31-2006, 03:01 PM #4Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
What hypocrisy Torog ..... what hypocrisy .... not everyone is as pleased as you claim ....
CNN, US media disregard condemnation of Saddam execution
CNN.com's homepage exclaimed "DEATH OF A DICTATOR" in an increased 32 point font on Saturday (12/30/06) after Saddam Hussein was hanged. The accompanying article did not contain any condemnation from world leaders or leading experts, many of whom believed that Saddam's trial was flawed.
CNNExposed
:noel:
-
12-31-2006, 03:08 PM #5OPSenior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Originally Posted by GrowRebel
The ones that ain't pleased,are folks whose opinion,doesn't really matter,because they make excuses for tyranny to thrive.
Have a good one ...
-
12-31-2006, 04:14 PM #6Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Fair play is not an excuse for tranny to survive my friend ...
:noel:
-
12-31-2006, 07:20 PM #7Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Originally Posted by Torog
-
12-31-2006, 08:32 PM #8Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Ya know Torog, it really bewilders me that you claim to be a weed smoker, yet you cheer for and honor a country that does not give a shit about you whatsoever and will imprison you for consuming a naturally grown plant. Yea...thats real freedom right there! I think that is kind of hypocritical.
But anyway, Saddam was USA manufactured and USA de-manufactured. There were so many more brutal dictators that the US could have gone after such as North Korea who apparently has ADMITTED they have nuclear weapons. But then again North Korea would kick the shit out of the US in the first few days of the war, so it wouldn't be in there best interest.
p.s. Torog...next time you post a story, please provide a link to it as me and Piss do!
Read this story!
-
01-01-2007, 12:03 AM #9Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
What does it say about you guys?
-
01-01-2007, 12:21 AM #10Senior Member
Iraqi-Americans Cheer Saddam's Death
Originally Posted by Bong30
My nation has a first name...its F-A-S-C-I-S-M
Yes Bong I do hate Amerika now...and as an Amerikan...I am proud to burn and trample on the flag because we red, white, and blew it!!!!
Advertisements
Similar Threads
-
Americans underestimate Iraqi death toll
By LazySmoking420 in forum PoliticsReplies: 19Last Post: 02-26-2007, 11:52 PM -
Saddam could hang in hours -Iraqi officials
By Psycho4Bud in forum PoliticsReplies: 26Last Post: 12-31-2006, 03:57 AM -
Saddam sentenced! To death!
By kknight in forum Current EventsReplies: 6Last Post: 11-18-2006, 08:05 AM -
Officer "docked pay" for torturing Iraqi to death
By pisshead in forum PoliticsReplies: 26Last Post: 02-02-2006, 06:55 PM -
Cheer me, boo me
By beachguy in thongs in forum GreenGrassForums LoungeReplies: 13Last Post: 10-07-2005, 10:07 PM